Origins of the Atmosphere (OCR GCSE Chemistry A (Gateway))
Revision Note
Origins of the Atmosphere
The Early Origins
Theories on the development of Earth’s atmosphere have developed over time as instrumental analysis has improved
The surface of the early Earth was molten for millions of years during which time there was no atmosphere surrounding the planet
Eventually cooling began to take effect and allow for molten materials to slowly solidify forming land masses
Volcanoes formed on the land masses and released gases from the Earth’s interior through violent eruptions
Earth’s gravity prevented the gases from escaping into outer space and they formed the atmosphere
Analysis of the minerals in the earth's crust enables scientists to deduce the gases present millions of years ago that helped form those minerals
It is thought that the atmosphere at that moment in Earth’s history was similar to that of Venus or Mars today which consist mainly of CO2
During a period of intense volcanic activity, large amounts of carbon dioxide and water vapour were released, as well as nitrogen, hydrogen, ammonia, methane and other gases.
The early atmosphere therefore contained mainly CO2 and water vapour
There was little or no oxygen present
Volcanoes spewed out water, carbon dioxide and other gases from the Earth’s interior
While the surface of the Earth was still very hot the large quantities of water vapour remained in the gaseous state
When conditions cooled sufficiently, the water vapour later condensed and fell to the surface of the Earth, forming the oceans
Carbon dioxide is a water soluble gas (it is the gas used in fizzy drinks) and dissolves readily
When the water vapour condensed large amounts of CO2 dissolved in the oceans
Carbonate substances were precipitated during this process which later formed sediments
The Development of an Oxygen Rich Atmosphere
Primitive plants and algae began photosynthesizing which used up carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and released oxygen:
Carbon dioxide and water producing glucose and oxygen during photosynthesis
Through these processes over a long period of time, the amount of O2 in the atmosphere increased and the amount of CO2 decreased
Algae first evolved around 2.7 billion years ago and during the next billion years or so small green plants began to appear
As more and more plants began to appear the levels of oxygen began to increase which allowed for more complex life forms to evolve
This trend continued until around 200 million years ago the composition of the atmosphere reached similar characteristics as today: around 20% oxygen, 80% nitrogen and tiny amounts of other gases
Marine algae are throught to be responsible for about 90% of all the atmospheric oxygen produced
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